THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARUH 2 ,15 Opera Traditional Youth Choir To Perform When the Festival Youth Chorus performs May 3 at Hill Auditorium, they will be continu- ing an annual tradition as old as .the auditorium itself. Prior to the building of Hill, the May Festival was held on the sec- ond floor auditorium of old Uni- versity Hall. The stage was small and inadequate for holding a' large group. * * * HOWEVER, after the donation of the new auditorium by Regent Arthur Hill, larger scale produc- tions were made possible, and the Youth Chorus was included in the first festival at Hill in 1913. * * * SEVERAL MEMBERS of the original youth chorus have since had grandchildren participating in the festival. . "Song Cycle from the Masters" will be this year's contribution to the May Festival by the chorus. HISTORY MAKER: Varnay To Sing Wagner Program at 'U' Festival Astrid Varnay, appearing with Set Svanholm, tenor, in the tra- ditional all Wagner program of the festival concerts, has already established herself as a maker of international operatic history. Aside from being the youngest soprano ever to have sung such formidable Wagner roles as Isolde and the three Bruenhildes with any major opera company any- where, Mme. Varnay has sung more leading Wagnerian roles than any other artist in the Me- tropolitan Opera's history. L A S T SUMMER, she again made international operatic his- tory when she became the first American singer ever to appear as Bruenhilde in the theatre Wag- ner built for the famous Wagner- ian music festivals in Bayreuth, Germany. There a tradition of 75-years standing, Wagner's "no curtain calls" rule, was broken to allow her to acknowledge the insist- ant clamour of the gala inter- U I Duey, Music Professor, To Be Only Local Soloist By HELENE SIMON It's a big step from a frightened four year old boy singing his first solo in the village parktohthe only local artisttaking part in the May Festival. But this is what has happened to Prof. Philip Duey of the School of Music who is going to be the only "local talent" appearing on the stage of Hill Auditorium in the same performance with Patricia Neway, Anton Dermota, and George London. * * * * THE GOOD-NATURED PROFESSOR still remembers how he felt at the age of four "when I was lifted over the bandstand and left gaz- .ing into a sea of faces." Mack Harrell1, Met Baritone, Began Career As Violinist ASTRID VARNAY national audience. Leading dramatic soprano at the Met for the past tenyears, Mie. Varnay hasalso achieved success in the dramatic soprano parts of the Italian and German Repetoires. Last season she was as great- a hit in Verdi's "Simon Boccanegra" as she was in Verdi's "Flying Dutchman" and her ap- pearanceas. "Electra" in Strauss's opera was unprecedented. The series of musical events which catapulted the American star to world fame began in Italy, where Mme. Varnay was the first American singer ever to open the brilliant Florence May Festival. Her interpretation of 'Verdi's Mac- beth brought her a tumultous ac- claim from the Italian press and public. has since become one of the lead- ing tenors of that company, and has appeared in almost all the music festivals in Salzburg, under such eminent conductors as Tos- canini, Walter and Furtwangler. Dermota has also sung opera, recitals and oratorios in many leading capitals of the world, such as London, Paris and Rome. Of the many recordings he has made, most have been with the Vienna State Opera, and the latest of these is his singing of "Fledermaus." Dermota will also make an ap- pearance as guest artist with the New Orleans Opera Company. "I sang a pathetic song about a little boy with a mean step- mother," he said. "It's a far cry from my present repertoire." Prof. Duey, the youngest of 11 children, grew up in the rural en- vironment of a small town in Indiana. Although all his brothers and sisters were musically inclined, he was the only one who made music his career. AS A STUDENT at Indiana Uni- versity, Prof. Duey led "a busy but rewarding" life. He was awarded a Phi Beta Kappa key and the highest honor given for etra- curricula activities. He graduated with a Bachelor's degree and a Masters degree in voice. After serving as head of the music department of Butler Uni- versity in Indianapolis, he came to the University in 1947. "And I've been here ever since," he chuckled. Mack Harrell, the distinguished Metropolitan opera baritone who at the age of-eight imitated opera- tic soprano arias from the family record collection, will be heard in recital here Sunday afternoon. Although an accomplished sing- er at an early age; Harrell was in- spired to study the violin after attending a concert by Jasha Heifitz. * * * EVEN THOUGH he was suc- cessful at this, a young violinist whom he later marr4ed urged him to resume his singing after she heard him sing a small solo part in a glee club performance. While most singers date their rise to fame from the moment the Met waves its magic wand, Harrell already had two widely acclaimed continental concert tours under his belt before his Metropolitan Opera debut "in 1940. Harrell recalls his initial recital in Leiden, Holland with special affection, however. He began with a group of six Schubert songs and became more and more desperate as after each one there was not a murmur from the audience. But his plans of run- ning off the stage at the end were thwarted by the ten minutes of wild applause that followed. Har- rell learned later that Dutch audi- ences do not consider it polite to applaud between songs when there are several in a group. 11 mm" . I I' GUTOMAR, NOVAES r i1 fig - - - .......... The University Musica 7, NATHAN MILSTEIN I . . dazzling violin virtuoso SATURDAY, MAY 5, 2:30 i' ii E ,; ; , a d iI Appearing at the Fifty-Ninth Annual MAY FESTIVAL Appearing in TWO GREAT WAGNERIAN WORKS x ;, F- T 'silo .Y r rrY ..rr:f f .f r ' :r "' r"Y" : r r . frl "Y :;:,.". f %iji ffri,:'ryrii2':'"r'X} . ">: 1." '"rP.. %. r.;; j K' y{rI C Il is n / , ' 'ia!::: :?:: : i j %: i > .%. ,s}:'"l r .i./ ir7/ V V V ?jJ:v"' ' 'i.:+v ;# ?';?:;:vY:ti%::;5; ":::;:; I I r r: r ":rroi". f%, f... r r rr : lip ""?"" M et "rr t .ice"" Y: Saturday,' May 5' IF 8:0 'i=